Are Anti-Homeless Sidewalk Spikes Immoral?

Are Anti-Homeless Sidewalk Spikes Immoral?

Are Anti-Homeless Sidewalk Spikes Immoral?

Short metal spikes installed outside the entrance of a building in London on June 10, 2014.

Photo by Carl Court/AFP/Getty Images

Over the weekend, a photo of forbidding anti-homeless person spikes installed recently to prevent unwanted sleeping on the street outside a luxury housing unit in London (above) went viral on social media. The ensuing outrage has sparked an online petition to remove them that already has more than 100,000 signatures and the story has since been widely picked up by the BBC and other news outlets. London Mayor Boris Johnson declared the studs “ugly, self-defeating and stupid,” adding that the developer of the building “should take them down.”

But inelegant and heartless as they may be, sidewalk spikes and other deterrents are nothing new and unlikely to disappear altogether, momentary collective crisis of conscience notwithstanding.

Artist Nils Norman has been photographing what he calls “defensive architecture” since the late '90s and maintains an ongoing archive of images documenting the phenomenon. His 2001 book The Contemporary Picturesque features photos of surface spikes and studs and other urban design afterthoughts that punctuate cities around the world, underlining the persistent tension about what constitutes public space and private property.

Corrugated metal strip attached to pull-down security grate designed to prevent prostitutes from loitering in the doorway when the shop is closed, Madrid.

Courtesy of Nils Norman, the Urbanomics Archive

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Norman says that what he calls “unruly parcels of pavement,” or “spaces left over after planning,” are often referred to as “gap sites” or “leaking spaces.” They are “too small to develop, but large enough to encourage loitering or homeless camps,” he says, and often redesigned as “enclosed micro-parks that are cultivated with low-maintenance hardy shrubs to re-establish control over unfixed difficult spaces. Bum-free studs and anti-loitering devices proliferate on banks and in larger public gathering spaces.”

Bum-free metal balls, San Francisco.

Courtesy of Nils Norman, the Urbanomics Archive

Here, Norman shares photographs of a few examples of “bum-free” defensive architecture and design elements in London, New York City, Madrid, and elsewhere, designed to keep loiterers of all stripes from planting themselves where somebody doesn’t want them. The whole bum-free archive and more examples of defensive architecture can be seen on his website.

Bum-free studs on a staircase, to prevent people from sitting on the steps, NYC.

Courtesy of Nils Norman, the Urbanomics Archive

Large metal panels attached to a door are designed to prevent prostitutes from loitering in Madrid.

Courtesy of Nils Norman, the Urbanomics Archive

A large expanse of bum-free ironmongery, NYC.

Courtesy of Nils Norman, the Urbanomics Archive

Bum–free metal wall attachments prevent people from sitting on a wall in London.

Courtesy of Nils Norman, the Urbanomics Archive

Rugged bum-free stones are used to deter loitering, NYC.

Courtesy of Nils Norman, the Urbanomics Archive

Kristin Hohenadel's writing on design has appeared in publications including the New York Times, Fast Company, Vogue, Elle Decor, Lonny, and Apartment Therapy.